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                    <p>Participate in research on software, graphics, artificial intelligence, networks, parallel and distributed systems, algorithms, and theory
                        We like to say that Computer Science (CS) teaches you how to think more methodically and how to solve problems more effectively. As such, its lessons are applicable well beyond the boundaries of CS itself.</p>
                    <p>But CS is also, more generally, the study of information. How do you represent it? With what methods (aka algorithms) can you process it?</p>
                    <p>Perhaps the most liberal answer, though, is that CS “has no exclusive domain of its own, and that its importance comes from the problems to which it is applied.” And therein lies the excitement. CS empowers you with tools and ideas that can be applied to practically any domain of interest to you, both in college and beyond.</p>
                    <p>Contrary to popular belief, CS is not really about programming, even though you do learn how to program. Programming languages are tools that Computer Scientists use or create in order to solve problems of interest to them.</p>
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